- 96 Posts
- 262 Comments
commander@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Meta has discontinued its metaverse for work, tooEnglish
37·22 hours agoGo Valve go. Screw Facebook/Meta, Google, Apple. I want the future of VR to be standard desktop Linux centric. The iOS/Android state of mobile is annoyingly restrictive compared to even Windows let alone desktop/server Linux
commander@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Bethesda announces a new Fallout... reality showEnglish
34·2 days agoThe quality of the Fallout TV show to me is somewhere post-season 4 Dexter. Not at Dexter’s worst but far from great. It is watchable. Entertaining enough. Not very memorable. Good for syndicated reruns background noise while you eat. Milking something that doesn’t have a very high peak
commander@lemmy.worldto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•What's the current state of intel Arc GPUs on GNU/Linux? Open Source Driver? OOTB experience?English
10·4 days agoImproved over the last year
https://www.phoronix.com/review/intel-b580-opengl-vulkan-eoy2025
How it compares to Windows I wouldn’t know. I did use an Intel Arc for a while on Linux but switched to AMD for performance and idle power draw before the start of 2025. It was stable though with Steam Proton games and general day to day usage. Probably pretty good performance today relative to what it can do on Windows today compared to 2023-2024 when I was using Intel
When I first got the card, Switch emulation did not work. I think it was around mid 2024 when it started to work well
commander@lemmy.worldto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Palworld is getting a trading card game this summerEnglish
3·4 days agoStill need to try this game. If you want a game way more like the main Pokemon games, Nexomon Extinction is good. Really looking forward to the third game
commander@lemmy.worldto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Memory crisis expected to last until 2031, supply already allocated for 2026English
2·5 days agoI’m betting on a $700/$800 Steam Deck 2 when that launches and that being a solid deal. PS6 and it’s rumored 36GB of memory, don’t hold your breath for a release
Don’t have anything recurring. More like random $10-20 thrown here and there. It’d probably be more often if it was all more integrated/streamlined. Pretty much the hyped up Flathub payments feature someday. I’d do that more often than patreon/opencollective/etc. I’ve had a patreon sub for a few projects over the years
commander@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Switch 2 Sales Reportedly Struggled Over The Christmas PeriodEnglish
4·8 days agoThey haven’t had a crossover hit yet. The Switch had at least 2. Breath of the Wild on Launch and Animal Crossing during COVID. Hoping Star Fox get’s a major Breath of the Wild type jump for the series and maybe a new IP. Metroid would be good to have a new sub-series that changes up the formula for 3D adventure. Hopefully a new IP too
commander@lemmy.worldto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Schedule 1 and REPO beat out the likes of Clair Obscur: Expedition 33, Dispatch, and Silksong to be the highest rated Steam games of 2025English
3·11 days agoI’ve heard nothing but good things about Schedule 1. Haven’t gotten it yet since it doesn’t seem like has good gamepad control support yet but it’s planned. Modern gaming in practice, not as what’s most marketed as gaming, to me reminds me of the PS1 and back. A lot of really game-y games. Systems that you get really into. Learn the exploits. The patterns. Get high scores. Max damage numbers. The PS3/PS4 era is the cinematic narrative era. The late PS4 to present is a gameplay heavy era. Narrative heavy games may get the traditional media awards but it’s been a long time since I’ve felt like traditional media has been good at judging games for their gameplay. They’re more like junior film media. Felt that way to me at least ever since Starcraft 2 was topping/gave birth to Twitch.tv and then League of Legends and Counter Strike GO
Settlement Survival is pretty solid. I played that for a bit since it has an android version and it was a nice use of waiting room time
commander@lemmy.worldto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Qualcomm might have just announced the perfect processor for handheld PC gamingEnglish
16·11 days agoQualcomm support on Linux has been too mediocre and late to take it seriously so far over x86 products
commander@lemmy.worldto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Gamers desert Intel in droves, as Steam share plummets from 81% to 55.6% in just five yearsEnglish
10·12 days agoI bought into AM5 first year with Zen 4. I’m pretty confident Zen 7 will be AM5. There’s got to be little chance for DDR6 to be priced well by the end of the decade. Confident that I’ll be on AM5 for 10+ years but way better than the Intel desktop I had for 10 years because I will actually have a great update path for my motherboard. AM4 is still relevant. That’s getting to almost 10 years now. It’ll still be a great platform for years to come. Really if you bought early in the life of first gen chips on the socket for AM4/AM5, you’re looking at a 15 year platform. Amazing
commander@lemmy.worldto
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Valve’s brilliant Steam Deck now accounts for over 21% of all Linux gamers [on Steam]English
39·12 days agoHoping the Steam Machine can match the Steam Deck in success and get pre-build desktop/minipc wins like Lenovo having Steam OS versions of the Legion Go. Steam Frame dethrone the Meta Quest hopefully
commander@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft Office has been renamed to “Microsoft 365 Copilot app”English
27·12 days agoLol. Please everyone contribute to the change you want to see. If you’re not sharing spreadsheets and slide decks in a team, then for personal use you should be good with Collabora (LibreOffice based). It’s great. Write your novel and short stories in Collabora
commander@lemmy.worldto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•NVIDIA is preparing to add native Linux support to GeForce NOW according to VideoCardz.comEnglish
12·13 days agoI use GeForce Now for like 1 month a year or when they have a really good deal on a 6 month like a game I want
commander@lemmy.worldto
Linux Gaming@lemmy.world•PC Gamer: "I'm brave enough to say it: Linux is good now, and if you want to feel like you actually own your PC, make 2026 the year of Linux on (your) desktop"English
7·16 days agoIt’s been good for the average PC user for like 5 years. Pretty much when Google Docs became pretty ubiquitous from elementary school through university. Then also stuff like turbotax becoming something people use through a website rather than a application they buy a disc for from the store. Steam Deck was when Proton maturity reached a point where it became suitable for most gamers. Steam games on Android is the next mainstream frontier to pull users away from Windows. Now the main barrier to me is improving prosumer software/making open source alternatives competitive like how Blender became. Pretty much need people to get away from Adobe and FL Studio/etc
Windows is their #1 marketing platform for their other services. They crash and burned out of mobile and television so in the name of expanding their business into more and more subscription services, Windows is their only popular consumer platform and problem for them is that basic OS functionality that people want pretty much was reached with Windows XP. Everything new is an application that is easily installed afterwards or in a web browser. Packaging it into the basic Windows installation just bogs things down and makes it more busy. It’s a marathon. Linux will win eventually by having features and services out the box. Practically no services. No onedrive, o365, and copilot nagging
commander@lemmy.worldOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•Nearly all of Spotify has been scraped and is available via torrentsEnglish
43·21 days agoGet to acquiring Seagate external HDDs and shucking them for your own 3.5" drive bays before the data centers get them
commander@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•What the Linux desktop really needs to challenge WindowsEnglish
11·22 days agoBefore big commercial companies can succeed with the mainstream, flatpak permission handling that is as smooth as Android and iOS. Not everything is going to be in the distros base package manager and devs need a way to distribute software that can be expected to work on any of these devices. No confusions over why they’re system doesn’t know what to do with a deb or rpm file. Flatpak is the closest thing right now to something with universal adoption. After that it’s a slow and steady grind for market share. Like how Macs market share 20 years ago isn’t very different from where Linux is today
I think a hardware company could succeed better by marketing the devices as creation devices. Focus on Blender, Krita, Ardour, Darktable, Kdenlive, etc. Pretty much the niche Macs were marketed as 25 years ago getting regular people interested with stuff like garageband and imovie
commander@lemmy.worldto
RetroGaming@lemmy.world•Internet-Connected Consoles Are Retro Now, And That Means ProblemsEnglish
9·26 days agoPS4 online will probably have support longer than the PS3 but ya it’s a crappy situation. Ideally gaming keeps shifting away from closed software platforms to open ones so people can write/distribute easily community software solutions and users easily install them in the future as it is today on PC. Console libraries I don’t trust greatly anymore long term























It doesn’t take 3nm/2nm chips to make a great computer. The Switch 2 is has a Samsung 8nm SoC. Steam Deck is TSMC 7nm. A Steam Deck has a better processor than my Intel N150 NAS. We don’t need the strongest hardware for self hosting. Don’t need it for a good gaming experience. Someday we’ll get second hand server parts salvaged into home equipment. The PS5 had that jailbreak. That can someday be a useful Linux machine. Someday the Xbox Series. Someday there’ll be a wave of RISC-V SBC’s that are better than the most recent raspberry pi